
Two-hour free parking begins after Tameside Council U-turn
Two hours of free parking has been introduced in parts of Greater Manchester following a council U-turn.Two years ago there was uproar from shoppers and traders in Tameside after charges at 42 pay-and-display car parks were increased from £1 to £3.50 for three hours.However, motorists voted with their wheels, and visits to one car park in Ashton-under-Lyne fell by 20%, with shops seeing their takings collapse. It led to a change of heart and the revised two-hour charge-free period now applies to all Tameside Council-run car parks from Monday to Saturday before 18:00 BST.
Val Unwin, who runs Decisions Clothing in Ashton-under-Lyne, said: "It's the best thing that could have happened right now, the only downside to me is its taken longer than everyone would have liked."
Karen Whelan, who runs Chicken BBQ in the town's Market Avenue, also said the decision had come too late."They should have done this from the start because people have gone elsewhere now so hopefully it might bring them back," she said."We hope it will bring them back."Council leader Eleanor Wills said the authority had "taken stock of the parking offer and reflected that, as it stood, it didn't meet the needs of people".She added: "This two hours will hopefully encourage people to come into town centres."
Listen to the best of BBC Radio Manchester on Sounds and follow BBC Manchester on Facebook, X, and Instagram. You can also send story ideas via Whatsapp to 0808 100 2230.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
22 minutes ago
- BBC News
When does the first summer transfer window close?
The first summer transfer window of 2025 will close on Tuesday, 10 June at 19:00 summer has been split into two windows this year, with the first having opened on Sunday, 1 early window allowed teams participating in the Club World Cup the chance to sign players before the tournament begins on 15 second window will open on Monday, 16 June, before closing on Monday, 1 September at 19:00 BST for Premier League, EFL and Scottish Premiership rules state a transfer window cannot last more than 16 weeks in a calendar year, hence the split this City and Chelsea are the two Premier League clubs competing at the Club World Cup, but any team can participate in the early Madrid made use of the window to sign Trent Alexander-Arnold from Liverpool before they compete at the Club World article is the latest from BBC Sport's Ask Me Anything team. What is Ask Me Anything? Ask Me Anything is a service dedicated to answering your want to reward your time by telling you things you do not know and reminding you of things you team will find out everything you need to know and be able to call upon a network of contacts including our experts and will be answering your questions from the heart of the BBC Sport newsroom, and going behind the scenes at some of the world's biggest sporting coverage will span the BBC Sport website, app, social media and YouTube accounts, plus BBC TV and radio. More questions answered... Summer transfer window - your questions answeredWhen are the 2025-26 Premier League fixtures released?Why are 1bn euro release clauses becoming more common?


The Guardian
22 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Nato chief warns of Russian threat and calls for ‘quantum leap' in collective defence
Russia will remain an imminent threat to Nato even if there is peace in Ukraine and the western alliance has to dramatically increase its air defences and tank and weapon numbers as a result, the head of the organisation will say on Monday. Mark Rutte, who is visiting the UK and meeting the prime minister, Keir Starmer, is expected to outline why it is necessary for allies to agree a dramatic increase in military spending to 5% of GDP at a summit in The Hague later this month. At a speech at the Chatham House thinktank in London on Monday afternoon, the Nato secretary general will argue the alliance needs 'a quantum leap in our collective defence' and 'more forces and capabilities to implement our defence plans in full'. Critically, Rutte is expected to say 'the fact is, danger will not disappear even when the war in Ukraine ends', reflecting a belief that the Kremlin will not demilitarise even it agrees to a ceasefire and eventually a peace with Kyiv. Military planners believe that Russia will seek to retain an active and experienced army in excess of 600,000-strong and maintain elevated levels of defence spending of about 6.5% of the country's GDP, so threatening Nato's eastern flank. Rutte will first visit Sheffield Forgemasters, a nationalised steelmaker owned by the Ministry of Defence which makes complex components for nuclear submarines, before meeting Starmer and then giving his speech. The secretary general, a former Dutch prime minister, has been pushing a proposal for Nato members to agree to lift core defence spending to 3.5% of GDP by about 2035, with a further 1.5% on cyber and other related military infrastructure. Britain is expected to sign up to the plan, to be formally confirmed at the summit, as part of an effort to maintain the support of the US president, Donald Trump, who pressed for the new 5% target once he was elected president for the second time. Justifying the need for extra spending, Rutte is expected to say that Nato needs 'a 400% increase in air and missile defence' as part of a wider rearmament to maintain credible deterrence and defence. 'We see in Ukraine how Russia delivers terror from above, so we will strengthen the shield that protects our skies,' Rutte is expected to say, according to remarks trailed by Nato ahead of the speech, due to begin at 3.45pm London time (1645 GMT). There will also have to be wider restocking of weapons, run down initially during the long period of post-old ar peace and second, because so much has been donated to Ukraine to help it fend off the full-scale Russian invasion over the past three years. 'Our militaries also need thousands more armoured vehicles and tanks, millions more artillery shells, and we must double our enabling capabilities, such as logistics, supply, transportation, and medical support,' Rutte will add. Sign up to First Edition Our morning email breaks down the key stories of the day, telling you what's happening and why it matters after newsletter promotion Britain has promised to increase defence spending from the current 2.33% of GDP to 2.5% by 2027 and to 3% in the early 2030s. But a week ago, Starmer acknowledged that discussions about Nato's future military needs were also taking place. 'There are discussions about what the contribution should be going into the Nato conference in two or three weeks' time,' the prime minister said as he unveiled the UK's strategic defence review, as part of a wider conversation about 'what sort of Nato will be capable of being as effective in the future'. Rutte is expected to welcome the UK's strategic defence review which he will say will 'enhance Nato's collective defence'. The document said Britain faced 'a new era of threat' and that in order to deter Russia the UK had to become, in the words of Starmer, 'battle-ready'. Last week, one of the three members of the defence review team, the foreign policy expert Fiona Hill, said the UK needed to recognise that Russia considered itself at war with Britain and that the US under Trump was no longer a reliable ally. 'We're in pretty big trouble,' Hill said in an interview with the Guardian.


BBC News
26 minutes ago
- BBC News
Plan to demolish Leicester GP surgery for homes approved
A project to demolish a former GP surgery in Leicester and build homes in its place has been Saffron Lane scheme has been given the go ahead despite three applications being refused by the city council since approved plans are for two three-bed semi-detached houses at the front of the site and a two-storey block featuring four one-bed last application was rejected by Leicester City Council in December 2023, the Local Democracy Reporting Service (LDRS) said. Th reasons for refusal included the design of the building, living standards for future residents, a lack of storage space in one of the homes, poor outdoor communal space and issues of privacy for the future majority of the concerns related to flat block A, which would have been at the front of the APKA removed that building from its plans in the most recent submission in August last officers have now deemed the scheme to be acceptable, adding it is for "residential use in a residential part of the city", the LDRS added the GP surgery had been closed "for a long time" so there would be "no loss" to the community from its demolition.